He met Flash in a couple of JSA adventures and that was about it. I don't think they actually teamed up. I don't think he met Green Arrow until the Silver Age.I am not up on WW2 history, but did GOlden Age Superman team up with Flash at all, and/or Green Arrow? If so, then that's MORE history of being in the same world.
Uh mate, I was talking about the comics. Since Rebirth has just reestablished the Multiverse we like. After Flashpoint and Infinite Crisis put the Multiverse back together wonky.Holy ignoring my previous comment, Batman!
And Holy over-exggeration, Batman.
We are talking just TWO worlds... NOT a COIE experience.
Can you at least admit that virtually no one on TrekBBS wants that Crisis to happen (or at least not until the newspaper headline from the future, in season 1, declared it)? Virtually no one wants Earth 2, 3, Earth-Gotham and others all merged in with Earth 1. Just the one show that so far has 3 superheroes. (and possibly Krypto the Super-dog...or who/whatever was in the spaceship in the SG finale)
-SNIP-
As long as Cisco still has his Vibe powers he can open a portal in just a few seconds, so there's really no need to merge the universes.Holy ignoring my previous comment, Batman!
And Holy over-exggeration, Batman.
We are talking just TWO worlds... NOT a COIE experience.
Can you at least admit that virtually no one on TrekBBS wants that Crisis to happen (or at least not until the newspaper headline from the future, in season 1, declared it)? Virtually no one wants Earth 2, 3, Earth-Gotham and others all merged in with Earth 1. Just the one show that so far has 3 superheroes. (and possibly Krypto the Super-dog...or who/whatever was in the spaceship in the SG finale)
I was there during COIE, and i know that was the dawn of the Bronze Age at DC, which messed tings up, and continued to do so as they tried to fix it.
But you are ignoring the silver age which had Superman (and the other Big 2) team up with Flash in the justice League and other comics, and also ignoring the years of cultural history, from my grade school lunch box to Superfriends to the current shirts they sell at Walmart & other retailers that hve Flash & Superman in the same shirt.
I am not up on WW2 history, but did GOlden Age Superman team up with Flash at all, and/or Green Arrow? If so, then that's MORE history of being in the same world.
But with DCW, Supergirl will basically take over for Superman & Wonder Woman...adding gender diversity in a way not forced, as some people complain about in certain mediums.
Also, Rip's line about men of Steel and Dark Knights...while purposely vague, leaves the door open for Superman & Batman to be a part of Earth 1 history...question is, how do we get there?
And thinking about the DCW in "real world terms"...these shows WILL expire at some point... having a Justice League will be a nice coda for the heroes to "retire" to. And a JL without a superbeing like Superman, Wonder WOman or Supergirl would be a bit weird. Having Supergirl be the superbeing being rather than Superman would be a nice "adaptation".
As for audience reaction...let me retiterate the different audiences:
1) Hardcore fan who knows a lot of the backstory., and usually cool with it (or happy to complain about it)
2) Newbies...often, this is the next generation, like my daughters or my friend's sons...and there are sually hrdcore fans there to happily explain the back story
3) Casual viewer... in most cases, so casual, they won't let people know..not by social media or by dropping ratings. They'll shrug it off. Certainly no crazier than Felcity stopping 15,000 nukes or the craziness on Hawaii 5-0
The merging of Earth-1 and Earth-SG will NOT affect Earth-IRL. There are a total (so far) of 7 seasons of DCW shows (8 if you include Supergirl)... the merging will wipe away what, 12 minutes of DIALOGUE from literally over 100 hours of shows. people will recover and move on. I doubt there will be huge protests, even on social media. The positive buzz will outweigh the haters. The "trending topic" will talk about fans who like it, not focus on the haters (as opposed to the changes made from Trank's FF movie)
Being on TrekBBS, surely you have seen how fans rationalize inconcsistencies, no?
One easy way,is to say that Earth 1 sees a huge difference between metahumans (superpowered, but form Earth) and aliens (like Superman).
Also, it seems that Superman is focused on the East Coast, mostly Metropolis. That may seem like a different world that almost isn't real, and doesn't affect one's daily life. Kinda like how white suburbans see the "inner city". Or how the west is oblivious to the daily life of one in the Third World.
Just like white suburbanites think gun violence is an "inner city/urban problem", that's how residents might have felt about Superbeings coming to their part of the country.
And one last thought...What world, BTW, will Batman and Wonder Woman reside? Earth 1 or Earth-SG?
Holy ignoring my previous comment, Batman!
And Holy over-exggeration, Batman.
We are talking just TWO worlds... NOT a COIE experience.
Just the one show that so far has 3 superheroes. (and possibly Krypto the Super-dog...or who/whatever was in the spaceship in the SG finale)
I was there during COIE, and i know that was the dawn of the Bronze Age at DC, which messed tings up, and continued to do so as they tried to fix it.
But you are ignoring the silver age which had Superman (and the other Big 2) team up with Flash in the justice League and other comics, and also ignoring the years of cultural history, from my grade school lunch box to Superfriends to the current shirts they sell at Walmart & other retailers that hve Flash & Superman in the same shirt.
I am not up on WW2 history, but did GOlden Age Superman team up with Flash at all, and/or Green Arrow? If so, then that's MORE history of being in the same world.
Caitlyn loves Laurel Lance? I know Barry was introduced on Arrow before the Flash started, but that was just him, right? Caitlyn and Cisco, et al, didn't show up until this show.
And I don't remember Laurel Lance ever being on this show, was she?
The race. How on earth can you possibly write, straight out in the open, that the villain's plan is to use Barry's speed to destroy the multiverse, and then STILL have the hero think that going along with that plan is somehow going to lead to victory? That was so irritating.
He gave literally no reason whatsoever why racing Zoom would actually accomplish anything, and completely ignored the fact that doing it was literally giving Zoom what he wanted (again).
Wally and Jesse. Not that this was so terrible - they both had good parts in this - but throwing in such an obvious speed force set-up several episodes out only to do absolutely nothing with it was disappointing.
Personally, I want them to do a Crisis that merges the Arrowverse with the Star Wars verse. I want to see if Ollie can use the power of love to stop the dark side.
Actually Caitlin and Cisco made their debut in Arrow season 2, episode 19, "The Man Under the Hood" -- 10 episodes after Barry's 2-parter. They had a run-in with Deathstroke while packing up STAR Labs's Starling City warehouse, then touched base with Felicity about Barry's coma and helped her manufacture the Mirakuru antidote. They would later guest-star on the Arrow crossover episodes "The Brave and the Bold" in season 3 and "Legends of Yesterday" in season 4.
She was in "Who is Harrison Wells?," episode 19 of season 1 of The Flash -- exactly one season after Cisco and Caitlin debuted on Arrow. Joe and Cisco went to Starling City to investigate the Wells case, and that's when Laurel asked Cisco to create the Canary Cry device for her. Although I believe it was the first time they'd actually met.
Granted, there's no onscreen evidence that Caitlin herself was close to Laurel (although maybe they'd become Twitter buddies or something), but she didn't say "I loved her," she said "We loved her." "We" being the larger superhero community that Caitlin was part of, including both Team Flash and Team Arrow. She probably considered Laurel part of that extended family, even if they weren't individually all that close.
It's a pretty standard fictional trope, though. "But it's a trap!" "I know it's a trap, but it's the only way to beat him/her/them."
The reason was that Zoom had explicitly stated that he'd keep killing Barry's loved ones unless Barry agreed to the race. Once the plan to disable the magnetar failed, Barry was out of options other than winning the race -- or, as it turned out, using the race as a lure and a distraction for Zoom so that he could deliver his temporal coup de grace. (Coup de temps?)
Not really, though. It went way beyond the standard trope, because it's not actually a trap. It's Barry voluntarily providing his own power to enable the destruction of the multiverse. And the second part of the trope was also completely hollow, since Barry refused to provide even a single coherent thought on exactly how he was going to beat Zoom in this race - there was nothing different about this compared to any other time he tried to beat Zoom and failed. Which makes the sudden turnaround where he instantly has a workable plan even less convincing.
But Barry wasn't pushing it as a last ditch effort. He didn't even want to consider trying to destroy the magnetar, he wanted to skip straight to the race and to hell with the risk to literally inifinite civilizations. It was extraordinarily unheroic.
I think you're confusing "keeping the plan close to his vest so the audience will be surprised" with "not having a plan at all and suddenly thinking of one at the last second." After all, Zoom had literally given Barry the plan at the start of the episode -- he created a time remnant of himself, then killed it, then said to Barry that he was "almost there" and had to be able and willing to kill his own time remnant if he wanted to beat Zoom. So the plan was in Barry's mind, and the audience's if they were paying attention, since the teaser. The gun was on the wall from the start, in plain sight. Some part of Zolomon must've had a death wish, must've wanted Barry to end his misery, because he literally told Barry how to defeat him.
The team tried to destroy the magnetar while Barry was imprisoned in the pipeline. Wells reported that it was physically impossible to dismantle the magnetar without destroying Earth-1. So yes, that too was explained. That option simply was not on the table.
I never disagreed that that part wasn't explained *eventually*, but the explanation does nothing to put Barry's behavior prior to that in a better light.
So, who will the Season Three Big Bad be? I have to assume it's going to be something very different; surely they're not going to do Evil Speedster Who Masquerades As A Mentor Figure three times in a row! The obvious answer might be the Rogues as a team. They can't do Grodd because he's too expensive.
Time for Mirror Master I guess. He's one Rogue we haven't seen yet. The mirror gimmicks should make for interesting visuals, especially short cuts through the mirror dimension.So, who will the Season Three Big Bad be? I have to assume it's going to be something very different; surely they're not going to do Evil Speedster Who Masquerades As A Mentor Figure three times in a row! The obvious answer might be the Rogues as a team. They can't do Grodd because he's too expensive.
Uh what? The real Eobard Thawn is from Earth-1. Is there even an Earth-2 Eobard?EEobard Thawne (the real one) from Earth-2
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